This randomized controlled trial was designed to investigate whether a daily training session using a bedside cycle ergometer, started early in stable critically ill patients with an expected prolonged ICU stay, could induce a beneficial effect on exercise performance, quadriceps force and functional autonomy at ICU and hospital discharge compared to a standard physiotherapy program.

A 20-minute cycling exercise session is performed 5 days a week using a bedside cycle ergometer. Patients can cycle passively and actively against increasing resistance. Besides this, patients receive the standard physiotherapy program as in arm 2

Other Names:

exercise therapy

exercise training

exercise

cycle training

cycle exercise

Motomed Letto

Active Comparator: 2

Behavioral: Standard physiotherapy program

The standard physiotherapy program consists of daily chest physiotherapy and a mobilization session on 5 days per week.

Other Names:

Usual physiotherapy

Routine physiotherapy

Mobilization

Detailed Description:

Inactivity during prolonged bed rest leads to muscle dysfunction. Muscle function decreases even faster in ICU patients due to inflammation, pharmacological agents (corticosteroids, muscle relaxants, neuromuscular blockers, antibiotics), and the presence of neuromuscular syndromes, associated with critical illness. A recent recommendation document advices to start early with active and passive exercise in critically ill patients. However, no evidence is available concerning the feasibility of an early muscle training intervention in the acute ICU phase when patients are still under sedation. A rather new method to train bed-bound patients is the use of a bedside cycle ergometer. This randomized controlled trial was designed to investigate whether a daily training session using a bedside cycle ergometer, started early in stable critically ill patients with an expected prolonged ICU stay, could induce a beneficial effect on exercise performance, quadriceps force and functional autonomy at ICU and hospital discharge compared to a standard physiotherapy program.

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Please refer to this study by its ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00695383